Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Catching the stupid

Bloomberg has an interesting article that points out that the broad NSA information gathering tends to gather information on ordinary folks (not suspected of crime) but misses the really hard core jihadis and criminals, who manage to hide their stuff from easy scrutiny.

In a January 2012 report
titled “Jihadism on the Web: A Breeding Ground for Jihad in the Modern
Age,” the Dutch General Intelligence and Security Service drew a
convincing picture of an Islamist Web underground centered around “core
forums.” These websites are part of the Deep Web, or Undernet, the
multitude of online resources not indexed by commonly used search
engines.

So grandmom's "LOL Cat" emails that she sends all over the world will probably be watched, but not the pedophiles using TOR and certainly not the jihadis.

When the German Foreign Office hosted a human rights conference several months ago, one of the invited guest organizations was the Tor Project.
The Tor Project runs a secure, anonymous network and distributes free
software used by dissidents and free speech activists worldwide.
Activists in countries like Syria and Ethiopia use Tor regularly. The Tor Project, in fact, receives funding from the United States State Department for that very purpose.
There's
a catch, however. The same secure communications Tor offers have
attracted spies, criminals, and pedophiles alongside political
dissidents.

And if I, a lowly grandmom in the rural Philippines, knows about TOR (I've posted about it and where you can download the software in the past), why doesn't the NSA know about it.

And the "good news"?

Wait until Obamacare and the gov't push to computerize medical records becomes universal.

Then not only Grandmom's "Lol cat" emails will be sucked into a black hole for big brother to monitor, but you will find her pap smears and medical history there.